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459 results for "cultural adaptation" — page 1 of 23
ZC_4_19 — Disaster Resilience Anthropology: Cultural Adaptation to Catastrophe
Disaster anthropology — the study of how human societies prepare for, experience, respond to, and recover from catastrophic events — emerged as a distinct subfield through the work of Anthony Oliver-Smith (University of
W_1_30 — Alexander the Great: Conquest, Hellenization, and Cultural Fusion
Alexander III of Macedon (356–323 BCE), known as Alexander the Great, created the largest empire the ancient world had seen in just 13 years of campaigning — conquering from Greece to Egypt to the Indus Valley, covering
ZH_5_05 — Cross-Cultural Constellation Patterns: Connecting Star Groupings Worldwide
Every documented human culture groups stars into constellations or asterisms — named patterns that organize the sky into a readable, memorizable, and culturally meaningful map. Yet surprisingly few star groupings are uni
ZH_2_12 — Agricultural Astronomy: Star-Based Planting and Harvest Calendars
Before modern calendars, weather services, and agricultural extension offices, farming communities worldwide used stellar observations to time their agricultural activities — planting, irrigation, harvesting, and animal
ZH_1_01 — Archaeoastronomy: Discipline, Debates, and Cultural Astronomy
Archaeoastronomy is the interdisciplinary study of how past cultures understood, used, and integrated celestial phenomena — the motions of the sun, moon, planets, and stars — into their architecture, ritual practices, ag
C_1_01 — Cross-Cultural Patterns & Synthesis
This synthesis document maps the universal serpent/reptilian being across 13 major civilizations, finding that all 13 originally depicted serpent figures positively — as teachers, civilizers, and wisdom-keepers. The nega
C_5_20 — Seasonal Ritual Cycles: Solstice, Equinox, and Agricultural Festivals
Seasonal ritual cycles — religious festivals, agricultural ceremonies, and sacred observances tied to the solstices, equinoxes, and the transitional points between them — represent humanity's oldest continuous relationsh
C_2_14 — Rainbow Serpent Across Cultures: A Cross-Cultural Comparative Analysis
The Rainbow Serpent is arguably the most geographically widespread and temporally deep mythological motif in human culture, appearing as a primordial water/creation deity across Australian Aboriginal traditions (where ro
INTERDOC_22 — Near-Death Experience, Afterlife Belief, and Cross-Cultural Evidence
[KEY FINDING] The AWARE (AWAreness during REsuscitation) study — a four-year prospective study across 15 hospitals in the UK, US, and Austria, led by Sam Parnia (published 2014, Resuscitation) — found that 39% of 140 car
INTERDOC_64 — Cross-Cultural Constellations: Independent Invention vs. Diffusion as a Knowledge-Transmission Probe
The 88 modern IAU constellations are a cultural product — 48 from Ptolemy (~150 CE, derived from Mesopotamian/Babylonian sources), 12 from Keyser and de Houtman (~1596, Dutch East Indies), and 28 filled in by 17th–18th c
ZC_4_16 — UNESCO World Heritage: Protection, Politics, Cultural Patrimony
UNESCO World Heritage — the international system for identifying, protecting, and preserving sites of "outstanding universal value" — represents both humanity's noblest effort at collective stewardship of shared cultural
G_2_12 — Cultural Evolutionary Theory — Boyd, Richerson, and Henrich
Cultural evolutionary theory — developed primarily by Robert Boyd, Peter Richerson, and Joseph Henrich — provides a rigorous, formally modeled framework for understanding how cultural traits (beliefs, practices, technolo
T_4_06 — Cross-Cultural Psychology
Cross-cultural psychology investigates how culture shapes human thought, emotion, and behavior — and which psychological processes are universal versus culturally specific. The field distinguishes between etic approaches
L_5_06 — Genetic Adaptation to Disease: Malaria, Plague, TB
Infectious disease has been the most powerful selective force on the human genome throughout history. Pathogens — particularly malaria, plague, tuberculosis, smallpox, and cholera — have killed more humans than all other
L_5_11 — Genetics of Altitude Adaptation: Tibet, Andes, Ethiopia
High-altitude adaptation represents one of the most dramatic and best-studied examples of natural selection in contemporary human populations. More than 140 million people worldwide live at elevations above 2,500 meters,
H_1_11 — Chinese Cultural Revolution — Destruction of the Four Olds
The Chinese Cultural Revolution (1966–1976) unleashed one of history's most devastating campaigns of deliberate cultural destruction. Launched by Mao Zedong to reassert ideological control and purge perceived enemies, th
H_3_17 — Linguistic Genocide: Language Suppression as Cultural Erasure
Linguistic genocide — the systematic, deliberate destruction of a people's language as a means of cultural erasure — has been a consistent tool of colonial and authoritarian regimes worldwide. Distinguished from natural
H_3_08 — Ethnobotanical Knowledge Loss and Biocultural Extinction
An estimated 80% of the world's population relies at least partially on traditional plant-based medicine (WHO estimate), and approximately 25% of modern pharmaceutical drugs are derived from or inspired by compounds firs
ZE_5_02 — Ethics of Cultural Appropriation: Borrowing, Theft, and Appreciation
Cultural appropriation — the adoption of elements (dress, music, cuisine, religious symbols, hairstyles, language) from one culture by members of another, typically from a marginalized or minority culture by members of a
R_3_05 — Coevolution — Arms Races, Mutualisms, and Red Queens
Coevolution — reciprocal evolutionary change between interacting species — is one of the most powerful engines of biological diversity. Leigh Van Valen's Red Queen hypothesis (1973) captured its essence: species must con
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